I am one of those who ranks the drawn line alongside the discovery of fire and the invention of agriculture on the list of human advances. However, I have learned after years with this blog that a number of you actually believe painting, not drawing, is the true test of an artist. As I understand this rather remarkable claim, an artist must work with the full symphony of elements presented by a painting in order to ascend to the higher tiers.
It is with this audience in mind-- the people who incomprehensibly remain unseduced by a jaunty line-- that I've selected a painting as today's example from The Art of Richard Thompson.
Santa's Sweatshop |
In my opinion, Richard's full color work contains excellent touches, reminiscent of an artist who has worked full time with color and has developed a painterly way of viewing the world. Another example of the breadth of his talent.
3 comments:
This is very cute, funny-sad. I love "clausco" and the way the red thread threads the sewing machine. I can tell he's looked at those early pedal-powered machines and how absurdly kluged they are in terms of their engineering. And the gravity defying bell at the top is the topper. Fun stuff!
I love Richard Thompson's work, and I'm so happy to see you highlighting it!
Kev Ferrara and Arun Kumar-- many thanks.
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